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IKIRU (DVD/1.33/MONO/B&W/1952/ENG-SUB) DVD Movie

IKIRU (DVD/1.33/MONO/B&W/1952/ENG-SUB) DVD


1.33:1: Pre-1954 Standard

PN: 037429180525     Release: 01/06/2004
Starring: Takashi Shimura, Nobuo Kaneko, Kyoko Seki
Director(s): Akira Kurosawa


Ikiru
Akira Kurosawa's Ikiru details the existential struggle of one ordinary man in his desperate search for purpose. Upon learning he has terminal stomach cancer, a low-level government bureaucrat (Takashi Shimura) leaves his job of thirty years without a word to find meaning in the year he has left to live. He is completely alone in the world -- his wife is dead, his son is practically estranged, and his co-workers (the people with whom he has more contact than any others) are little more than strangers. Rather than face a death alone in pathos, Shimura opts to make up for lost time by going to the bar (for the first time in his life), spending every last yen in his wallet and drinking himself to death. There he meets a black-clad artist (a Mephistopheles to his Faust) who leads him on a hellish (and darkly humorous) tour of the city after dark as the two crawl through every booze-soaked juke-joint in town (Kurosawa's classical training as a painter surfaces in this sequence; many critics have noted the striking similarity of the crowded dance hall scenes to the paintings of Hieronymous Bosch, (particularly Walpurgis Night). Realizing he has missed nothing, Shimura then sets his sight on a pretty young girl from the office to divert his attention from his looming mortality. Although the girl fails to serve as a lifebuoy, she does give him the inspiration to do something meaningful -- to leave a legacy, however small, that makes the world a better place. A synopsis of Ikiru cannot serve the film justice; it simply must be seen. ~ Jeremy Beday, All Movie Guide
Cast
Takashi Shimura as Kanji Watanabe
Nobuo Kaneko as Mitsuo Watanabe
Kyoko Seki as Kazue Watanabe
Miki Odagiri as Toyo Odagiri
Makoto Kobori as Kiighi Watanabe
Yunosuke Ito as Novelist
Crew
So Matsuyama - Art Director
Akira Kurosawa - Director
Fumio Hayasaka - Composer (Music Score)
Shinobu Muraki - Production Designer
Yoshiro Muraki - Production Designer
Asakazu Nakai - Cinematographer
Shojiro Motoki - Producer
Shinobu Hashimoto - Screenwriter
Akira Kurosawa - Screenwriter
Hideo Oguni - Screenwriter

Ikiru
This contemporary drama from Akira Kurosawa, better known for such sweeping samurai epics as The Seven Samurai (1954), is arguably his best film and the most articulate vision of his existential philosophy. The film's protagonist seems to spring directly from the writings of Jean-Paul Sartre or Leo Tolstoy's The Death of Ivan Ilych: a tragic, pathetic figure who has so immersed himself in daily routine that he never learned to live. Only when confronted with his own imminent demise does he give his live meaning by building a playground over an open sewer in an impoverished section of town. The film is structured in a peculiar bifurcated arrangement: it begins as a straightforward plot that, halfway through, shifts into a fragmented narrative recounted in flashbacks by mourners at Watanabe's funeral. In the second half, we witness Watanabe's dogged struggle through the lenses of his baffled co-workers' own unexamined lives. Initially viewing his efforts with suspicion if not contempt, his workers fail to give Watanabe any credit for his single-handed effort to build the park. This section of Ikiru becomes compelling and ironic thanks to Kurosawa's deft depiction of Watanabe's inner state in the first half. Ikiru opens with an X-ray of Watanabe-a literal manifestation of his interior world. The rest of the section, through a tour-de-force of impressionistic and expressionistic cinematic devices, shows Watanabe's slow awakening from his quarter-century stupor to learn what it is to live. Takeshi Shimura delivers a staggering performance as Watanabe; his large pleading eyes and hangdog face burn a haunting image in the viewer's mind long after the film ends. The emotional force of Ikiru leaves the viewer feeling both transformed by Watanabe's evolution and contemplative about one's own life. ~ Jonathan Crow, All Movie Guide
 
Telluride Film Festival, Film Presented (nominated)

 

General Specifications:

Language Options:Japanese
Subtitle Options:English
Sound Processing:DD1: Dolby Digital Mono
Additional Features:New high-definition digital transfer, with restored image and sound Audio commentary by Stephen Prince, author of "The Warrior's Camera: The Cinema of Akira Kurosawa" Original theatrical trailer New and improved English subtitle translation Optimal image quality: RSDL dual-layer edition "A Message from Akira Kurosawa: For Beautiful Movies" (2000): An 81-minute documentary produced by Kurosawa Production Inc., featuring interviews with the director on the sets of his later films A 41-minute documentary on Ikiru from the series "Akira Kurosawa: It Is Wonderful to Create," including interviews with Kurosawa, writer Hideo Oguni, actor Takashi Shimura, and many others
DVD Aspect Ratio:1.33:1: Pre-1954 Standard
MPAA Rating:
DVD Discs Included:2
DVD Sides:2
DVD DVD Region Code:1
Content Length:143 min
 

DVD Chapters:


Side #1 -- Movie
1. Credits [2:21]
2. The Main Character [4:11]
3. Runaround [3:53]
4. An Unusual Absence [1:29]
5. Amateur Prognosis [3:12]
6. Professional Prognosis [3:08]
7. Home [4:08]
8. Memories [8:01]
9. Whereabouts Unknown [2:42]
10. A Sympathetic Ear [9:43]
11. Night on the Town [14:52]
12. Thirty Years for What? [9:29]
13. An Afternoon Together [3:57]
14. Unwrapping the Mummy [4:47]
15. Father & Son Confrontation [3:31]
16. Last Date with Toyo [10:26]
17. A New Purpose [2:14]
18. Questioning Watanabe's Death [4:15]
19. A Matter of Credit [4:21]
20. Respects Paid [2:19]
21. Making Sense of Watanabe [29:38]
22. The Policeman's Story [7:07]
23. Business as Usual [1:24]
24. Watanabe's Legacy [1:40]
25. Color Bars [:00]


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